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Minnesota and other states are considering whether to adopt California's tough car pollution standards for reducing greenhouse gases, now that the Obama administration has signaled its support.
Joe Raedle/Getty Images
President Barack Obama outlined Tuesday the
nation's first comprehensive effort to curb vehicle emissions while
cutting dependence on imported oil, calling the plan an historic
turning point toward a "clean-energy economy."
Joined in the White House Rose Garden by leaders of the auto
industry, labor, government officials and key national and state
political leaders, Obama said the agreement that once would have
been "considered impossible" was what he termed a "harbinger of
a change in the way business is done in Washington."
The two-pronged approach to problems that compound threats to
the global environment marks the latest in a series of shifts by
the Obama administration away from the policies of his conservative
predecessor, former President George W. Bush.
"We're all agreeing to work together on a national program."
"As a result of this agreement," Obama said, "we will save
1.8 billion barrels of oil over the lifetime of the vehicles sold
in the next five years. And at a time of historic crisis in our
auto industry, this rule provides the clear certainty that will
allow these companies to plan for a future in which they are
building the cars of the 21st century."
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He said the new rules amounted to removing 177 million cars from
the roads over the next 6 1/2 years.
In that period, the savings in oil burned to fuel American cars,
trucks and buses would amount to last year's combined U.S. imports
from Saudi Arabia, Venezuela, Libya and Nigeria.
While the new fuel and emission standards for cars and trucks
will save billions of barrels of oil, they are expected to cost
consumers an extra $1,300 per vehicle by the time the plan is
complete in 2016. Obama said the fuel cost savings would offset the
higher price of vehicles in three years.
While requiring that vehicle carbon dioxide emissions be reduced
by about one-third by the target date, the plan requires the auto
industry to be building vehicles that average 35.5 miles per
gallon.
Exhaust flows out of the tailpipe of a vehicle. Vehicle emissions are one of the main causes of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.
Joe Raedle/Getty Images
The plan also would effectively end a feud between automakers
and statehouses over emission standards - with the states coming
out on top but the automakers getting the single national standard
they've been seeking and more time to make the changes.
The plan, to be proposed in the Federal Register of pending
rules and regulations, must still clear procedural hurdles at the
Environmental Protection Agency and the Transportation Department.
Automakers expressed their support for the plan. "We're all
agreeing to work together on a national program," said Dave
McCurdy, president and CEO of the Alliance of Automobile
Manufacturers.
Administration officials said consumers were going to pay an
extra $700, anyway, for mileage standards that had already been
approved. The Obama plan adds another $600 to the price of a
vehicle, a senior administration official said, bringing the total
cost to $1,300 by 2016.
Under the changes, the overall fleet average would have to be
35.5 mpg by 2016, with passenger cars reaching 39 mpg and light
trucks hitting 30 mpg under a system that develops standards for
each vehicle class size. Manufacturers would also be required to
hit individual mileage targets.
In a battle over emission standards, California, 13 other states
and the District of Columbia have urged the federal government to
let them enact more stringent standards than the federal
government's requirements.
The states' regulations would cut
greenhouse gas emissions by 30 percent in new cars and trucks by
2016 - the benchmark Obama planned to unveil for vehicles built in
model years 2012 and beyond.
The Obama plan gives the states essentially what they sought and
more, although the buildup is slower than the states sought. In
exchange, though, cash-strapped states such as California would not
have to develop their own standards and enforcement plan. Instead,
they can rely on federal tax dollars to monitor the environment.
The auto industry will be required to ramp up production of more
fuel-efficient vehicles on a much tighter timeline than originally
envisioned. It will be costly; the Transportation Department last
year estimated that requiring the industry to meet 31.6 mpg by 2015
would cost nearly $47 billion.
But industry officials - many of whom are running companies on
emergency taxpayer dollars - said Obama's plan would help them
because they would not face multiple emissions requirements and
would have more certainty as they develop their vehicles for the
next decade.
(Copyright 2009 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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Minnesota and other states are considering whether to adopt California's tough car pollution standards for reducing greenhouse gases, now that the Obama administration has signaled its support.
Joe Raedle/Getty Images
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